Personal
Random Notes
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Tue, 09/13/2011 - 21:39It's been a long day, so I'm just posting a few random notes.
Today was primary day in 21 municipalities in Connecticut. Early results are about as expected. Maybe I'll have more to say about that later.
Tonight was back to school night. With my eldest daughter in her twenties, it has been close to two decades of my going to back to school nights. It was good to see old friends, but pretty much, I heard what I've heard every year.
I spent a little more time playing with Empire Avenue. I'm building some analytics to try and optimize my portfolio. We'll see how that goes.
More some other time when I'm not as tired.
The End of Summer
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Tue, 09/06/2011 - 06:25So, yesterday was Labor day, a day to celebrate what working people have done for out country. It is also the symbolic end to summer. Fiona returns to school today. Kim and I are back at work. Saturday was Kim’s birthday and the anniversary of her mother’s death to cancer. Next week is the tenth anniversary of 9-11 and there is a family reunion and a work picnic. It is a good day for reflections.
Years ago, I attended a labor event, where one of the chants was, “Our life is more than our work, and our work is more than our jobs.” It has always stuck with me. There are many things that are important to me in my life. Traditions, my curiosity, writing, helping other people, and perhaps most importantly, my family. This leads to my work. Helping other people, and caring for my family, especially when I can do it with my writing, captures important parts of my work.
My current job as a social media manager at a community health center fits nicely with this work, especially when I get a chance to use my writing to help the health center care for others. To the extent that it helps pay the rent and put food on the table, it also fits nicely with my work, but, as the old labor chant goes, my work is more than my job.
I’m not a big person for horoscopes, but my horoscope for today seems to fit nicely:
You may need to deal with disapproval today, Cancer. This will likely come from someone you see as a superior or authority figure, perhaps a parent or teacher. While it's important to listen, if what they have to say involves your personal life and how you live it, it's no one's concern but yours. No matter what you do, someone will disapprove of something!
So, I’ll continue with my writing, both at work, and my personal writing. I’ll continue nurturing my relationships online with my online writing, including writing computer programs like the ones I’ve been doing for Empire Avenue. I will continue to focus on the political aspects of my writing. Even though our political system seems horribly broken with too much polemics and too little critical thinking, if I can just get people to think a little more about what their social contracts really are, I may be able to help in little ways.
As summer comes to an end, Cheryl Wheeler’s song, “Summer’s Almost Over” comes to mind:
Summer's almost over and I'm crying but I don't know why
Sentimental old fool, weeping for this blue, blue sky
And the way the cat is sleeping and the way the garden grew
Wagging dogs who lick my face and the way I feel for you
The Velveteen Marriage
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sat, 09/03/2011 - 06:42Last night, Kim, Fiona and I went to a friends’ house for pink drinks and dip. After the long, trying post Hurricane Irene week, even the most inveterate introverts needed a chance to hang out with friends, and anyway, there was politics to discuss.
The pink drink was a concoction made of Pina Colada mix, and assorted juices including cranberry, pomegranate, and pineapple. It was based on a drink that Kim had had during our vacation on Cape Cod, modified based on what was available, and mixed with Vodka. The dip was a buffalo chicken dip that Kim put together. We first had it at a picnic for Kim’s family, and Kim got the recipe and made it her own.
The discussion started off with stories about the storm and coping without electricity for close to a week. It had been a challenge for many, and some straight women, and a few gay men spoke of a strong desire to go out and kiss the linemen that had brought power back into their lives. Some of the linemen have travelled great distances to assist in the restoration of power, and their stories could be grist for a really bad romantic novel, or a really good folk song.
Another theme for the evening was kicking off not only Labor Day, but also the celebration of Kim’s birthday. There was a cake and a really nice gift from our friends. It led to discussions of how Kim and I met. It was a little over twelve long hard years ago.
You see, Kim’s mother was dying of cancer, and both Kim and I were trying to put our lives back together after failed marriages. I was working at a lucrative, but highly stressful job, and I approached my new found dating life a little bit too much like an executive. I read the personals as if they were resumes. The first dates were like interviews, and promising candidates were invited back for a second interview.
Yet there was another side to the whole experience. Dating can be a lot like Christmas. You approach each new date like you are opening a new present. Will this present be that magical something you’ve been longing for, perhaps not even able to describe? Or, will it be another pair of socks, or a really nice shirt? Don’t get me wrong, I am truly appreciative of the socks and nice shirts that I’ve received as gifts, but there is something more. Sometimes, there is a gift that catches the attention for a brief while before it is put aside, but the longing for the special gift remains.
When Kim and I started dating, I had been through more than enough first dates, a few second dates, and there were a few women that I saw more than twice. By the third date, Kim let me know that if the relationship was going to go anywhere, I needed to stop seeing any other women. That wasn’t too difficult. At the time, there was only one other woman I had been continuing to date. I asked her out one last time to say goodbye, but I’m not good at saying goodbye, so things ended awkwardly.
With that, Kim set off on our journey together. Kim’s mom died. We got married. America was attacked. Fiona was born. Lots of Kim’s older relatives died, and it seemed like date night had been replaced with funerals. Then it was my turn for older relatives to start passing away. Kim got Lyme disease. The economy crumbled, and we tried to hold things together.
The magic of the early days of a relationship, like the day after Christmas when you keep playing with that special toy are long gone, but they have been replaced by something greater.
"What is REAL?" asked the Rabbit one day, when they were lying side by side near the nursery fender, before Nana came to tidy the room. "Does it mean having things that buzz inside you and a stick-out handle?"
"Real isn't how you are made," said the Skin Horse. "It's a thing that happens to you. When a child loves you for a long, long time, not just to play with, but REALLY loves you, then you become Real."
"Does it hurt?" asked the Rabbit.
"Sometimes," said the Skin Horse, for he was always truthful. "When you are Real you don't mind being hurt."
"Does it happen all at once, like being wound up," he asked, "or bit by bit?"
"It doesn't happen all at once," said the Skin Horse. "You become. It takes a long time. That's why it doesn't happen often to people who break easily, or have sharp edges, or who have to be carefully kept. Generally, by the time you are Real, most of your hair has been loved off, and your eyes drop out and you get loose in the joints and very shabby. But these things don't matter at all, because once you are Real you can't be ugly, except to people who don't understand."
In our case, it is pattern baldness that has loved most of the hair off my head and it is Bell’s Palsy brought on by Lyme disease that caused one of Kim’s eyes to droop and her joints to get sore. “But these things don't matter at all, because once you are Real you can't be ugly, except to people who don't understand.”
Our finances continue to be very tight, and with the chaos of the last week, I didn’t manage to find any special gift to give Kim. Yet like the monk in the Zen Story, “The Moon Cannot Be Stolen”, there is something more beautiful, something more important. The moon cannot be stolen, nor can it be given to a thief, but the ability to appreciate the moon is available to anyone, and perhaps the most important gift is the ability to be real with the person you love.
With that, today, on her birthday, I give Kim this blog post, reaffirming our Velveteen Marriage.
On the Journey...
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Thu, 09/01/2011 - 10:46Rabbit, Rabbit, Rabbit. Another month starts and another incantation of the childhood verse to bring good luck. Last month, I was too busy and didn’t start off my blog post with the chant, and August has been a rough month. I am currently sitting at the town library, haven recently taken a cold shower at the town high school, as I wait for my power to return. Perhaps there are some parallel systems going on, since not only is our house powerless, but there are other areas where I’m feeling powerless right now as well.
Yet they say that whatever doesn’t kill you makes you stronger, and to borrow from Monty Python, “I’m not dead yet”. So, I’m waiting patiently for power to return and thinking about what I will do when the power comes back. Joseph Campbell’s Hero with a Thousand Faces seems to be looking over me and I wonder where I am on my current journey.
Whenever I think, “They say that…”, Bob Dylan’s “I Shall Be Released” comes to mind:
They say every man needs protection
They say that every man must fall
I swear I see my own reflection
Somewhere so high above this wall
I haven’t figured out what this has to do with the aftermath of the storm; perhaps that’s part of the monomyth to be discovered, yet
I see my light come shining
From the west unto the east.
Any day now, any day now,
I shall be released.
So, I sit at the library and read Thoreau’s “Cape Cod”. It provides an interesting contrast and perhaps connection between our week camping on Cape Cod, and our week without power in Connecticut.
So, another month starts. It brings with it Kim’s birthday, the tenth anniversary of 9/11 and who knows what else. Perhaps a lucky rabbit’s foot will be my magical talisman.
Vacation
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Fri, 08/19/2011 - 18:47As of 5 PM this afternoon, I am officially on vacation. For the next week, I’ll be out on Cape Cod. Most of the time, I expect to be on the beach, resting, maybe reading a little, and swimming and walking a bit. It has been an especially long and hard week, so I’m trying to decide my media strategy for the week. For several years, I’ve managed to get a blog post up, every day, even when I’ve been on vacation. Typically, these blog posts are much shorter, sometimes just a picture with a paragraph talking about it. I’ve often sent some messages to Twitter or Facebook, and checked in on Foursquare when I’ve gone to a really great clam bar.
Now, I’m even more entwined with social media. I won’t be making as much on Adgitize while I’m gone, and it will drop to almost nothing if I don’t blog. My stock on Empire Avenue has done very well, but it is sure to decrease over the coming week. The question is, how much? It will be more of a drop depending on how little I am really involved with social media.
My vacation is going to be fun, and I want my friends to share with the fun. Yet I also want to make sure that social media doesn’t get in the way of the fun.
So, I’m going to take this day by day. Maybe I’ll put up a blog post tomorrow. Maybe I won’t. Even if I do, I might just stop part way through, or this might be my last blog post for a few days, and I’ll post something in the middle of the vacation. We’ll see. Meanwhile, I really need this vacation.